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- Microsoft paid cold hard cash to a British security research who uncovered a bug in a preview version of the operating system. October 10, 2013 5:39 AM PDT The Windows 8.1 Preview. (Credit: Screenshot by Lance Whitney/CNET) With little more than a week ahead of Windows 8.1's rollout, Microsoft says it dished out its biggest ever reward to a British researcher who found a chink in the armor of the new operating system. According to The Guardian, James Forshaw uncovered a bug in a preview version of Windows 8.1 that hackers could exploit. The London resident is a security researcher Microsoft paid Forshaw $100,000, the first time it has paid such a big reward. Katie Moussouris, Microsoft senior security strategist, told the paper that Forshaw's discovery was particularly valuable because it learned a new technique of attack and its variants. Thanks to a newfound ability to defends against whole classes of attacks, Microsoft paid more because than it would for an individual bug discovery. Microsoft has opened preorders for Windows 8.1, the update coming later in October 18, that's designed to make it easier for people to absorb the dramatically different interface that Windows 8 introduced. Windows 8 fell flat with many customers by booting into a start page covered with high-contrast app rectangles rather than the familiar desktop with its start button. In 8.1, Microsoft reinstates the start button and gives users the option to boot their systems into the old-style desktop interface.
Microsoft paid cold hard cash to a British security research who uncovered a bug in a preview version of the operating system. October 10, 2013 5:39 AM PDT The Windows 8.1 Preview. (Credit: Screenshot by Lance Whitney/CNET) With little more than a week ahead of Windows 8.1's rollout, Microsoft says it dished out its biggest ever reward to a British researcher who found a chink in the armor of the new operating system. According to The Guardian, James Forshaw uncovered a bug in a preview version of Windows 8.1 that hackers could exploit. The London resident is a security researcher Microsoft paid Forshaw $100,000, the first time it has paid such a big reward. Katie Moussouris, Microsoft senior security strategist, told the paper that Forshaw's discovery was particularly valuable because it learned a new technique of attack and its variants. Thanks to a newfound ability to defends against whole classes of attacks, Microsoft paid more because than it would for an individual bug discovery. Microsoft has opened preorders for Windows 8.1, the update coming later in October 18, that's designed to make it easier for people to absorb the dramatically different interface that Windows 8 introduced. Windows 8 fell flat with many customers by booting into a start page covered with high-contrast app rectangles rather than the familiar desktop with its start button. In 8.1, Microsoft reinstates the start button and gives users the option to boot their systems into the old-style desktop interface.
Microsoft paid cold hard cash to a British security research who uncovered a bug in a preview version of the operating system.
(Credit: Screenshot by Lance Whitney/CNET)
With little more than a week ahead of Windows 8.1's rollout, Microsoft says it dished out its biggest ever reward to a British researcher who found a chink in the armor of the new operating system.
According to The Guardian, James Forshaw uncovered a bug in a preview version of Windows 8.1 that hackers could exploit. The London resident is a security researcher
Microsoft paid Forshaw $100,000, the first time it has paid such a big reward.
Katie Moussouris, Microsoft senior security strategist, told the paper that Forshaw's discovery was particularly valuable because it learned a new technique of attack and its variants. Thanks to a newfound ability to defends against whole classes of attacks, Microsoft paid more because than it would for an individual bug discovery.
Microsoft has opened preorders for Windows 8.1, the update coming later in October 18, that's designed to make it easier for people to absorb the dramatically different interface that Windows 8 introduced.
Windows 8 fell flat with many customers by booting into a start page covered with high-contrast app rectangles rather than the familiar desktop with its start button. In 8.1, Microsoft reinstates the start button and gives users the option to boot their systems into the old-style desktop interface.